Post on 07-May-2023
Andreas Bieler, Jamie Jordan and Adam David Morton
EU aggregate demand as a way out of crisis? Engaging the post-Keynesian
critique
Published in the Journal of Common Market Studies: https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12843
Abstract
Post-Keynesians have delivered an important advance in providing explanations of the Eurozone
Crisis, not the least in demonstrating how the formation of the European integration project
lacked the means to manage effectively the macroeconomic imbalances between ‘core’ and
‘peripheral’ spaces across the region. Through a critical engagement with such descriptions, this
article argues that to account more adequately for the formation of the asymmetrical and crisis-
ridden forms of development across the Eurozone, it is necessary to focus on the uneven and
combined development of Europe’s ‘peripheral’ spaces and their integration into an expanded
free trade regime since the 1980s. It is through a focus on the structuring condition of uneven
and combined development shaped by capitalist social relations of production and attendant
class struggles that we can better locate the origins of the present crisis.
Keywords
class struggle, Eurozone Crisis, Greece, Portugal, uneven and combined development
Contact details:
Professor Andreas Bieler, School of Politics and IR, University of Nottingham/UK,
Andreas.Bieler@nottingham.ac.uk
Dr. Jamie Jordan, University College Dublin, Ireland, Jamie.Jordan@ucd.ie
Prof. Adam David Morton, Department of Political Economy, University of Sydney,
Adam.Morton@sydney.edu.au
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Andreas Bieler, Jamie Jordan and Adam David Morton
EU aggregate demand as a way out of crisis? Engaging the post-Keynesian critique
There is general agreement that the Eurozone crisis since 2010 has had a devastating impact on
countries in the European periphery, such as Greece and Portugal, expressed in record levels of
unemployment, social inequality and widespread social deprivation. There is, however, no
agreement on the causes of the crisis, nor on how the crisis can be resolved. One set of lay
explanations for the Eurozone crisis may focus on cultural arguments. Apparently, ‘lazy Greek
workers’ have been put forward in some circles as the cause of the crisis, even though Greeks are
amongst those who work the most hours in Europe.1 Another, more scholarly, set of
explanations emphasises the way different national institutional set-ups and growth models have
been brought together within Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). The crisis ‘originated in
the structural strains generated when different types of political economies were joined in a
currency union’ (Hall, 2012: 357). Export-led growth models of Germany and other northern
European states, built on high levels of wage co-ordination, benefited from monetary union,
while countries with demand-led growth strategies and no wage-co-ordination ran into trouble
(Hall, 2014: 1228).2 In short, EMU’s institutional design is regarded as causative in the
incompatibility of different national political economies. Yet another set of explanations argues
that unsustainable capital flows—in particular moments of capital flight ‘from a country’s banks
and sovereign debt markets’ (Jones, 2015: 822)—are the major cause of the Eurozone crisis.
Greater controls of capital flows are then the logical solution to the problem (Schelkle, 2017:
1 Charlotte McDonald, ‘Are Greeks the hardest workers in the world?’, BBC News (26 February,
2012), http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-17155304.
2 Further institutionalist assessments of the Eurozone crisis across the Comparative Capitalism literature include amongst others Hancké (2013), Höpner and Lutter (2018), Johnston (2016), Johnston, Hancké and Pant (2014), as well as Johnston and Regan (2016). For a criticism of this literature’s methodological nationalism, see Pradella (2014), for a more general criticism of this literature’s limitations, see Bruff (2011).
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314-15). While the cause of the crisis is here identified in relation to capital flows rather than
institutional incompatibilities, the main focus remains on analysing different national political
economies in an additive and externally related manner rather than as part of a larger whole.
A major, yet less discussed, contribution to the question regarding the causes of the
Eurozone crisis has been made by a range of post-Keynesian scholars together with some critical
historical materialists such as Costas Lapavitsas. Unlike the above literature that tends to focus
on diverse national institutional configurations, these scholars emphasise unevenness across the
European political economy, as a whole, from the onset of EMU in 1999. National political
economies are, thus, not regarded as distinctive, separate entities, but as closely related parts
within a larger whole. The purpose of this article is first to engage critically with this contribution
to our understanding of the crisis. Thus, in the following section, we outline and then critique the
post-Keynesian account.3 Second, we present an alternative historical materialist account
emphasising how the roots of the crisis go much further back, immediately to the very moment
when countries such as Greece and Portugal joined the EU during the 1980s and indeed beyond.
Rather than reducing the causes of unevenness within European political economy to the
institutional set-up of EMU, our argument demonstrates that the uneven and combined
development of capitalism has always constituted the geopolitical dynamic of the European
integration project. This is so because within historical and contemporary processes of capitalist
expansion there can be no ‘complete parallelism’ of economic, social, and political
development—or a situation of ‘even’ development—because of the permanency of different
structures and dynamics of state formation, labour movements, and the relationship of forces
between classes (Mandel, 1967/1975: 155). Most acutely, uneven development pertains to the
very expansionary essence of capital and the existence of competition between ‘many capitals’
searching for surplus profit and increases in the rate of surplus-value (Mandel, 1975: 27). Our
3 Post-Keynesianism is an enormously broad church and our critique is delimited by its focus on
those scholars engaged in this article tackling the Eurozone Crisis.
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argument, then, shares the view that uneven and combined development is a historically specific
geographical expression of capitalism and a necessity within capital accumulation (see Smith
1984/2008: 4, 202; Smith, 1986: 97). But the contribution of what follows hones this insight to
make the point that uneven development is very much the hallmark of geographical space
resulting from the necessity of capital accumulation within the EU, constituting a regional
contradiction of both expanded equalisation and sharpened differentiation in conditions of
production.
Emphasising the importance of aggregate demand: the post-Keynesian assessment
From the end of the economic crisis in the early 1990s and especially in the first half of the
2000s, GDP growth rates had been comparatively high in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain
and often higher than in Germany as well as the Eurozone and EU averages (Bieler and Morton,
2018: 223). As a result, when looking at the volume index of GDP per capita in Purchasing
Power Standards (PPS), as expressed in relation to the European Union (EU28) average set to
equal 100, by 2006 Greece had almost caught up with the EU average at a level of 96, with
Portugal at a level of 83 having done slightly less well (Eurostat, 2017). However, this growth
proved to be unsustainable. When the global financial crisis struck, economic growth quickly
vanished due to it being driven largely by debt that could no longer be accessed or financed
(Hart-Landsberg, 2016: 2). By 2016, PPS in Portugal had fallen back to 77, Greece even further
to 68 compared to the EU average, set at 100 (Eurostat, 2017). Post-Keynesian analyses tend to
identify the institutional set-up of EMU as the main cause of the crisis and thus uneven
development across the European political economy. ‘EMU came with an economic policy
package that is rule bound and has proven exceptionally dysfunctional during the crisis’
(Stockhammer, 2016: 366). The related undermining of national policy autonomy in responding
to economic crises is singled out as especially problematic (Stockhammer and Köhler, 2015: 38).
With exchange rates fixed between countries as a result of the common currency and national
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fiscal policy severely restricted within the Stability and Growth Pact, the only way to increase
competitiveness has been downward pressure on wages and work-related conditions (Lapavitsas
et al., 2012: 158). Thus, EMU was by default designed from the beginning as a model which
would struggle to generate enough demand and almost inevitably relied on financialisation and
the creation of national and personal debt for economic growth.
This has resulted in two distinct growth models, which are both unstable: debt-driven growth and export-driven growth. Both allow for growth, but are intrinsically unstable, because they require increasing debt to income ratios. In the case of the debt-driven model it requires domestic debt; in the case of the export-driven model it requires foreign debt of the trade partners. It is these rising mountains of debt that erupted in the crisis (Stockhammer, 2016: 369).
Hence, the main problems of EMU are understood to be the result of insufficient demand and,
in particular, the asymmetries in the formation of aggregate demand across the European
political economy shaped by the institutions of EMU (Patomäki, 2012: 79).
The uneven dynamic between the two different models is reflected in trade statistics.
Export-driven growth models such as Germany have experienced an export boom in recent
years, with almost 60 per cent of its exports going to other European countries (Trading
Economics, 2013). However, such a growth strategy cannot be adopted by all states equally.
Some countries also have to absorb these exports. This is what many of the peripheral countries
now in trouble—such as Greece, Portugal, Spain and Ireland—have done (Laskos and
Tsakalotos, 2013: 86). The large profits resulting from German export success, of course, needed
new fixes of investment to generate more profits. State bonds of peripheral countries seemed to
be the ideal investment opportunity with guaranteed profits, backed by sovereign states. Thus,
‘Germany has been recycling its current account surpluses as FDI (Foreign Direct Investment)
and bank lending abroad’ (Lapavitsas et al., 2012: 31; see also Stockhammer and Köhler, 2015:
42). In turn, these credits to the periphery were used to purchase more goods in the core or to
invest in non-tradable sectors such as construction. ‘Trade imbalances have fuelled credit growth
and bubbles in the credit-led economies as the current account surpluses of the export-led
economies were flowing to credit-led economies and providing further liquidity’ (Stockhammer,
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2011: 10). Ultimately, post-Keynesians contend that the creation of credit links back to increasing
income inequality over past decades. Seeing their relative income decline, poorer households
increasingly had to rely on credit to maintain living standards. In aggregate terms, ‘given the rise
in inequality the credit expansion in the personal sector were both necessary for supporting
aggregate demand and employment and at the same time unsustainable’ (Sturn and van Treeck,
2013: 126). The introduction of the Euro and the related low interest rates in peripheral countries
facilitated this financialisation of the European political economy, as it made cheap credit more
available. Peripheral states, unable to compete with productivity levels and strong export
performance in Germany, ended up with large current account deficits. In the long run, such
development strategies based on capital inflows were unsustainable.
When it comes to potential solutions to the crisis, wage growth is regarded as essential
for the stimulation of aggregate demand (Lavoie and Stockhammer, 2013: 4-5).4 ‘We argue that
an active co-ordination of wage policy has to be at the centre of a new policy mix. This requires
institution building and a very different role for labour unions in economic policy making’
(Stockhammer, 2011: 5). Considering unevenness within the regional political economy of
Europe, emphasis is placed on wages growing in line with productivity but the increase, it is
argued, needs to be above productivity growth plus inflation in the export-oriented countries in
general (Stockhammer, 2011: 19)—and particularly in Germany (Stockhammer, 2016: 375)—in
order to re-balance matters. A post-Keynesian proposal in this respect is the ‘European wage
standard’, based on national collective bargaining that is co-ordinated at the European level and
intended to cause a convergence at the regional level of national wage shares, and, thereby, halt
falling wage-shares. As argued by Emiliano Brancaccio, ‘above the minimal level of growth, the
standard would link the growth of nominal wages with respect to labour productivity to the
balance of trade so as to foster a return to equilibrium between countries with trade surpluses
4 This is also argued by some institutionalists, see, for example, Johnston, Hancké and Pant
(2014: 1795).
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and those with deficits’ (Brancaccio, 2012: 56). This focus on demand management through
wage policy is complemented with demands for a restructuring and shrinking of the financial
sector, a wealth tax, mechanisms to redistribute wealth across the various regions of the EU as
well as a fiscal policy with the goal to ensure full employment (Stockhammer, 2016: 375-6). The
vision for the European future is clearly a federalist solution with a common economic and wage
co-ordination policy. Finally, it is argued from a post-Keynesian perspective that one solution to
the Eurozone crisis lies within the embedding of a democratic global Keynesianism. As Heikki
Patomäki argues, ‘global Keynesianism aims to regulate global interdependencies in such a way as
to produce stable and high levels of growth, employment and welfare for everyone and
everywhere, simultaneously’ (Patomäki, 2012: 175). A wage-led recovery should be based on a
‘Global Keynesian New Deal’, including a re-regulation of the financial sector, the reorientation
of macroeconomic policies in export-led growth countries towards a stabilisation of domestic
demand and, third, ‘the reconstruction of international macroeconomic policy co-ordination and
a new world financial order’ (Hein and Mundt, 2013: 175).
Nevertheless, there are at least two key flaws in this post-Keynesian assessment. First,
post-Keynesians assume that capitalism can overcome crises successfully, if the right state
policies are adopted. This overlooks the persistence and necessity of uneven development within
capital accumulation and, specifically, the regional political economy and geography of space
within Europe. As Nicos Poulantzas (1978: 95-7) reminds us, the social formation is the nodal
point of the expanded reproduction of capitalism marked by specific historical conditions within
regional conditions of uneven development, which means that modern capitalist space acquires a
different sense than in the past, albeit still crystallised by the state. Organised around wage labour
and the private ownership of the means of production, capitalist social relations of production
are enormously dynamic, since both labour and capital have to reproduce themselves through the
market. While workers compete with each other to sell their labour ‘freely’, capitalists are in
constant competition with each other over profitability and market share. ‘Under free
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competition, the immanent laws of capitalist production confront the individual capitalist as a
coercive force external to him’ (Marx, 1867/1990: 381). While capitalism is very dynamic,
however, it is also crisis prone. The more goods that are produced the more potential surplus-
value is generated that needs to be realised, making it more difficult to bring together excess
labour and excess capital in a fruitful way. Such capitalist disequilibrium, linked to the declining
rate of profit and how that depresses productive investment and leads to both a crisis of over-
production and a fall in the rate of capital accumulation, creates crisis conditions marked by the
devalorisation of capital (Marx, 1884/1992: 545). In response, capital is in constant search for
new markets in a drive towards outward expansion along uneven and combined developmental
lines (Bieler and Morton, 2018: 38-41). Therefore, whilst post-Keynesians correctly identify how
the development trajectories of national political economies are further drawn together in uneven
relations through the novel institutional architecture of the single currency, they overlook that
this has simply reinforced and exacerbated forms of unevenness that have characterised the
European political economy for much longer. Free trade policies, as initially embedded within
the EU Customs Union since 1968 and then especially the Internal Market from the mid-1980s
onwards, when free trade was extended from trade in goods to trade in services and finance,
have generally tended to reproduce long-standing developmental asymmetries and polarising
conditions between countries. As demonstrated below in respective sections on Greece and
Portugal, less developed countries remain locked into low-value added industrial sectors or even
experience deindustrialisation as industries in countries with lower productivity levels cannot
compete with the higher productivity levels in partner countries, which benefit
disproportionately from trade. ‘Unevenness is not . . . a result of market imperfections, but is in
fact a product of the way competitive markets work in the real world’ (Kiely, 2007: 18). Rather
than simply focusing on the institutional set-up of EMU as generative of unevenness across the
European political economy, a return to the role of capitalist social relations of production and,
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therein, so-called ‘free’ trade, in causing the structuring conditions of uneven and combined
development is required (Bieler and Morton, 2014: 41).
The focus on the ‘right’ state policies indicates the second key problem of post-Keynesian
analyses. They are in no doubt that the main cause of a decline in the share of wages in national
income is the decline in the bargaining power of trade unions (Stockhammer, 2013). Therefore, to
ensure wage growth, trade unions need to be empowered and play a clear role together with strong
employers’ associations, plus government involvement if needed, in national wage bargaining (Hein
and Mundt, 2013: 178). In other words, post-Keynesians invoke national institutions linked to the
post-World War II class compromise that had seemed to guarantee steady wage increases and strong
domestic demand levels in industrial countries such as Germany and Sweden during the 1950s, 1960s
and 1970s. Such a technocratic vision, however, completely misunderstands the dynamics underlying
working class gains in the post-1945 European political economy. Asbjørn Wahl (2011) makes clear
that strong bargaining institutions were not the result of benevolence by employers or state policies
but rather a result of class struggle. Against the background of the Cold War and based on strong
labour organisations at the national level, forged in industrial conflicts at the beginning of the
twentieth-century, labour was able to balance the social power of capital in society. The result was an
unstable equilibrium of compromises, in which capital retained the right to own the means of
production in exchange for rising wages and an expansive welfare state. The Keynesian economic
consensus at the time also underpinned European integration with its objective of obtaining social
cohesion across the EU. Keynesians, too, understood that the market in itself will not lead to even
development across Europe and, therefore, included the so-called Structural Funds as well as the
Cohesion Fund as additional measures to support less developed regions. Nevertheless, against the
background of global restructuring and the increasing transnationalisation of production and finance,
especially from the early 1980s onwards, the Keynesian consensus was replaced by variegated
neoliberalism (Macartney, 2010). Capital, now organising across transnational
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networks of production, renounced national class compromises based on its superior structural
power vis-à-vis trade unions. At the European level, the emergence of a new compromise of
‘embedded neoliberalism’ occurred. This predominantly focused on neoliberal deregulation and
liberalisation as embodied in the Internal Market and EMU, while social policies were reduced to
flanking measures (van Apeldoorn, 2002: 158-89). When the EU was enlarged to Central and
Eastern Europe (CEE) in 2004, key redistributive policies were not fully extended to the new
members (Bohle, 2006: 69-74; Ó’Beacháin et al., 2012: 227).
Of course, neoliberal restructuring was variegated and differed from state to state within
the EU. Nonetheless, in the end even Germany as the dominant economy was affected. The so-
called Hartz IV reform of 2003 led to the largest cuts in, and restructuring of, the German
welfare system in the post-war era (Bruff, 2010: 414-16; Jessop, 2014: 252). Collective bargaining
has become decentralised and ultimately eroded, the labour market as such has been liberalised as
a result of ‘the manufacturing firms’ efforts to cut costs and boost external competitiveness’
(Baccaro and Benassi, 2017: 101). In fact, it had been the downward pressure on wages and
working conditions of German workers, which facilitated the German export boom (Lapavitsas
et al., 2012: 30). Moreover, co-ordinated wage bargaining at the European level, as envisaged by
the post-Keynesians, had already been attempted between 1999 and the mid-2000s, but
eventually failed, especially because it had been impossible to enforce the mechanism in
Germany (Erne, 2008: 86-90, 96-9). Some observers blame German trade unions for this,
accusing them of prioritising the interests of German workers at the expense of workers
elsewhere. Indeed, in the so-called Pforzheim Agreement of 2004, German trade unions
accepted the increasing use of opening clauses, allowing companies to deviate from collectively
negotiated working conditions and wage increases on the basis of company level agreements
between employer and trade union. Consequently, ‘for the whole period from the adoption of
the Euro in 2000 right up to 2012, the average negotiated salary increase in Germany was 5.5 per
cent below productivity increase, and even more drastic the effective average salary increase was
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a further 9.3 per cent below the negotiated average salary’ (Bieler and Erne, 2014: 162). Others,
however, point out that this failure was to a significant extent due to German trade unions being
no longer able to match the power of capital. From the 1990s onwards, German production
structures, too, had increasingly been transnationalised with Central and Eastern European
(CEE) states, especially, offering a skilled and yet comparatively cheap workforce. Moreover, the
powerful metalworkers’ union, IG Metall, which organises workers in transnational
manufacturing in Germany, lost a strike in 2003 over the equalisation of conditions in the metal
industry between East and West Germany, i.e. precisely at the moment when the controversial
Hartz IV reforms, mentioned above, were imposed on German workers. The increasing use of
labour from temporary agencies by large companies during the 2000s further undermined the
collective strength of German trade unions (Bieler and Erne, 2014: 161-5). Unsurprisingly,
‘Germany now has the largest low-wage sector in the Eurozone (22 per cent of all employees)
and has experienced an above average rise in income inequality’ (Lehndorff, 2015a: 160),
underpinned in the current conjuncture by a resurgence of rules-based ordoliberal reasoning, and
domestic political pressures (Bulmer, 2014).
In short, the post-Keynesian proposal of reflating demand levels through wage increases
underpinned by the strengthening of trade union rights goes completely against the dominant
trend of neoliberal restructuring, based on changes in the balance of power in society in favour
of capital over labour. As Stockhammer and Köhler admit themselves, the post-Keynesian
‘suggestions have strong normative elements with little regard for the political preconditions of
its implementation’ (Stockhammer and Köhler, 2015: 45).
Uneven and combined development in the European political economy
Uneven and combined development between Northern and Southern European countries goes
back much further than simply to the establishment of EMU in the early 2000s. For Poulantzas
(1976: 10-13), Portugal, Greece and Spain exhibited a specific historical form of state marked by
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dependent industrialisation that was peculiar to these countries’ emergence within the European
arena of uneven development. From the very beginning of their EU membership—Ireland in
1973 and Greece, Portugal and Spain during the 1980s—all four countries have been further
integrated into asymmetrical relationships of uneven and combined development. Unevenness is
ultimately based on different productivity levels and concentrations of capital (equalisation) and
while Germany is mainly involved in capital-intensive sectors of global value chains (GVCs),
peripheral European countries have historically been strong in labour-intensive sectors
(differentiation). For example, the Portuguese economy is characterised by low-technology,
labour intensive production structures, often poorly organised and based on human resources
with low levels of qualification (Rodrigues and Reis, 2012: 198). These features persist despite a
sustained effort in the post-dictatorship period to converge on capital-intensive forms of
industrial accumulation through strategies of ‘catch-up’.
Having historically been leading sectors in Portugal’s economy, an analysis of the Textile
and Clothing (TC) and footwear industries, as well as motor vehicles, illustrates the difficulties
faced in producing a shift in dominant accumulation strategies that could overcome historical
forms of uneven and combined development across the geographical space of European political
economy. Despite the TC and footwear sectors expanding during the 1980s and the early 1990s,
this had little to do with a shift towards the sort of capital-intensive production found in
Europe’s core. After gaining unimpeded access to a larger European market through Portugal’s
accession to the then European Economic Community (EEC), the Small and Medium
Enterprises (SMEs) that dominated this sector were able to exploit already very low labour costs
alongside growing demand across consumer markets by functioning as subcontractors to larger,
international TNCs, focusing on labour-intensive assembly of prefabricated parts. Far from a
shift into more capital-intensive forms of textile, clothing and footwear manufacturing, these
sectors instead became subordinated to the requirements of transnational capital that captively
governs the relevant value chains of accumulation (Gibbon, Bair and Ponte, 2008: 323). As for
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the motor vehicle industry, in 1995 an assembly plant was opened in Palmela near Lisbon as a
joint venture between Ford and Volkswagen. This was used as irrefutable evidence of Portugal’s
convergence on more capital-intensive forms of accumulation. However, whilst 50 per cent of
the components that were part of the finished vehicles were produced nationally, the remaining
50 per cent, mainly capital-intensive production components, were imported from other
countries such as Germany, France and the UK. Further, many other highly profitable functions,
such as product strategy, sales and marketing, and investment were controlled and carried out by
divisional or head offices in the U.S. and Germany, respectively (Corkill, 1999: 163). Essentially
then, despite facilitating the type of large foreign direct investment—the largest in Portugal’s
history to that point—that was meant to provide the leverage to rapidly overcome historical
forms of uneven development, the same configuration of hierarchy developed in the
establishment of a new export-oriented production structure. As Marx (1894/1991: 364-5)
forewarned, ‘if capital is sent abroad, this is not because it absolutely could not be employed at
home. It is rather because it can be employed abroad at a higher rate of profit’. In sum, pointing
to ultra-modern advances in technology is never enough. This is because within the structuring
conditions of uneven and combined development, a ‘second wind’ to accumulation on a world-
scale can be derived from simultaneously reproducing new forms of both equalisation and
differentiation in production conditions.
Despite Greece’s policy programme of “catch-up” during the 1980s and especially in the
1990s, its economy experienced deindustrialisation from the moment it joined the EU in 1981,
unable to cope with the higher levels of competition within the EU free trade regime. This
increased competition witnessed many large manufacturing firms—constituting the core of
Greece’s industrial production structure—go bankrupt (Giannitsis and Kastelli, 2014). Now,
Greece’s manufacturing sector is dominated by very small firms when compared with businesses
in most other European countries (Linardos-Rulmond and Robolis, 2016: 10; Economakis et al.,
2015: 432). An overview of Greek exports since the 1990s indicates the predominantly labour-
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intensive activities. In 1990, the top exporting industries in Greece were the TC and footwear
sector (25.5 per cent of total exports), food products (17.9 per cent), chemicals and minerals
(13.1 per cent), and metal products (7.5 per cent). By 2006, a significant shift had occurred,
evidenced by the chemicals and minerals sector contributing to total exports with an increase to
16.2 per cent, followed by food processing (11 per cent), construction materials and equipment
(11 per cent), and then the TC and footwear share of exports standing at only 8.7 per cent
(Jordan, 2017: 136). This trajectory is only compounded by the fact that there has been no
equivalent prospect of shifting to more capital-intensive production as had initially been hoped
with the Palmela investment in Portugal due to a lack of significant foreign investment. In short,
the dominant accumulation regimes that cohered in Greece’s and Portugal’s political economies
have predominantly been based on labour-intensive forms of production.
This vulnerable position within Europe’s political economy has become further
precarious for Greece and Portugal as the deepening integration of emerging economies,
especially China, during the 1980s and 1990s into the global economy increased direct
competitive pressures across key industries. In particular, the TC and footwear industries have
lost market share to cheaper labour locations in Asia. Thus, the market share of Chinese goods in
this sector in the EU15 increased sharply at the expense of several southern European countries,
including Greece, though particularly Italy and Portugal (Leao and Palacio-Vera, 2011: 11-12).
For instance, Greece’s share of the TC and footwear sectors in total exports fell from 25.5 per
cent in 1990, to 8.7 per cent in 2006, without, as we have seen above, any significant growth in
other sectors that would compensate for this shift. In the case of Portugal, heightened global
competition precipitated a similar process of de-industrialisation around 2000 as Greece had
witnessed during the 1980s. Between 2000 and 2007 Portugal lost jobs in manufacturing at an
average annual rate of 2 per cent. Approximately 60 per cent of the jobs lost were in the
dominant export-oriented industrial sectors of Portugal’s economy (Lagoa et al., 2014: 13). For
instance, the level of employment in the TC sector declined from 11.6 per cent of total
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employees in 1982 to 5.4 per cent in 2006. Demonstrating this trend further, ‘textile importance
in industrial exports declined from 19 per cent in 1982 to 8 per cent in 2006, while clothing
exports, after increasing from 11 per cent in 1982 to 13 per cent in 1992, were to decline to 4 per
cent in 2006’ (St. Aubyn, 2014: 71) This was one of the fastest rates of deindustrialisation in the
EU (Lagoa et al., 2014: 13).
From the early 2000s onwards, even the prospect of shifting to more capital-intensive
parts of production diminished. This is primarily a result of the end of the Cold War and the
EU’s eastward expansion to CEE—a set of national political economies whose labour force was
cheaper, more skilled, and, importantly, much less institutionally integrated into a system of
collective bargaining than their Southern European counterparts. In fact, West European
corporations have benefitted greatly from this unevenness between the old EU member states
and the new members from CEE. Anticipating the enlargement of the EU in 2004, transnational
capital reorganised value chains of accumulation to the new member states of CEE (Mamede,
2012: 38) By integrating suppliers from low wage CEE countries in their transnational
production networks, corporations reduced their wage costs considerably through whipsawing
tactics that put subcontractors and workers from different locations in competition against each
other. German multinationals profited most from the availability of a cheap and well-trained
industrial labour force in its Eastern hinterland. They established themselves predominately in
the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia and used relocation threats to obtain
concessions at home. ‘The delocalisation of manufacturing to emerging Europe has actually
helped to create jobs in the home country by sustaining productivity in manufacturing, while
contributing to the sharp fall in Germany’s relative unit labour costs’ (Simonazzi, Ginzburg and
Nocella, 2013: 660). This increased their international competitiveness significantly, whilst also
exacerbating unevenness of industrial competitiveness, and the inability to overcome it, between
different regions.
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This restructuring within European production networks and the eastward re-orientation
of German trade therefore came at a cost for Southern European countries, which were unable
to find alternative export outlets and were increasingly unable to compete with China in their
traditional production sectors. In response, a notable part of Southern Europe’s low-cost
industry moved to the EU’s South-East, where wage-levels are as low as in China (Stan and
Erne, 2014). Between 2003 and 2008, the flow of Italian and Greek direct investments in
Romania and Bulgaria (12.89bn US$), for example, exceeded German investments in these two
countries (11.08bn US$) by far, especially if one bears in mind that the German GDP figures
were about 40 per cent higher than the combined Italian and Greek numbers (UNCTAD, 2014).
As a recent study confirmed, in order to avoid bankruptcy ‘more than 12,000 firms (1.5 per cent
of all Greek companies in 2012) have relocated from Greece to the Balkans and Cyprus during
2007–2012’, and here especially Bulgaria (Kapitsinis, 2017: 703). As long as cheap credit within
the Eurozone guaranteed the necessary aggregate demand despite ongoing wage moderation, the
relatively high growth rates between the mid-1990s and 2007 in Europe’s southern and eastern
periphery seemed to indicate a “catching-up” process or equalisation with core EU countries.
The global financial crisis of 2008 rent asunder this illusion reinforcing the point of
differentiation and that the ‘determination of the state by the relations of production, or the
primacy of struggles over the state, is inscribed in diverse temporalities and in historical forms
marked by uneven development’ (Poulantzas, 1978: 41).
In sum, despite post-Keynesian assessments, uneven development cannot simply be
reduced to the institutional set-up of EMU and the introduction of the Euro in the early 2000s.
Uneven development, rather, is the hallmark of geographical space resulting from the necessity
of capital accumulation within the EU, constituting poles of both expanded equalisation and
sharpened differentiation in conditions of production, as witnessed in the Internal Market with
the free movement of goods, services, capital and labour, locking states such as Greece and
Portugal into a subordinated position within GVCs.
16
Class struggle in the Eurozone: going beyond technocratic policy solutions
When reflecting on how to overcome the Eurozone crisis, rather than simply pursuing a post-
Keynesian focus on technocratic solutions, a focus on social class struggles within, against and
beyond the crisis needs to be established. David Harvey (2005: 16) has identified neoliberalism as
a strategy by (transnational) capital to re-enforce its control over the production process and
restore class power. Ongoing austerity across the EU in the form of European integration, too,
can be understood as a class project by capital to strengthen its position vis-à-vis labour. This does
not imply that there have been no tensions or differences between various class fractions of
capital. European export-oriented capital showed some concern about the dominant crisis
response, considering that severe austerity imposed across the EU’s periphery dampened
international demand. There was not a questioning, however, of the overall need for austerity.
For instance, in the Spanish case there is strong support for austerity amongst capital, directly
linked to perceptions of an unsustainably large public sector, and the perceived negative
consequences for external competitiveness derived from trade union participation in wage
bargaining (Albertos and Kuo, 2018: 37). In Germany and Sweden there is, furthermore, clear
historical evidence amongst large export-oriented capital of a preference for, and implementation
of, liberalising ‘co-ordinated’ industrial relations institutions (Kinderman, 2017; Baccaro and
Benassi, 2017: 98-107). Some smaller firms in Europe’s southern periphery objected to the
decentralisation of collective bargaining, but only because they believed that this enabled a more
effective way of controlling the demands of labour whilst also dampening competitive market
pressures (Bulfone and Afonso, 2017: 14). Larger capital did not share this reluctance (Bulfone
and Afonso, 2017: 17). Therefore, ultimately the crisis has provided capital with the opportunity
to justify cuts and roll back workers’ rights (Lehndorff, 2015b) that they would not otherwise
have been able to implement. In May 2010 and March 2012, Greece received financial assistance,
Ireland was bailed out in November 2010, Portugal in May 2011. In March 2013, it was Cyprus’
17
turn. Most recently, Greece was bailed out for the third time in summer 2015 under highly
controversial circumstances surrounding a struggle between a Greek government led by the
relatively new party Syriza and the Troika on behalf of the EU. Spain and Italy have also been
heavily affected. Whilst not having to succumb to a formal bailout package, Italy and Spain had
to present austerity programmes, developed nationally, before the extension of loans from
European institutions were made to recapitalise their banks. For those under the ‘guidance’ of
formal agreements, the bailout packages were made dependent on austerity policies including: (1)
cuts in funding of essential public services; (2) cuts in public sector employment; (3) pushes
towards privatisation of state assets; and (4) the undermining of industrial relations and trade
union rights through enforced cuts in minimum wages and a further liberalisation of labour
markets.
In more concrete terms, the EU’s peripheral countries were initially obliged to drastically
cut back fiscal spending. For example, ‘the fiscal cuts imposed on Greece amount to 10.5 per
cent of GDP for 2010 and 2011, and another 9.9 per cent until 2014. The consequence of this
austerity has been a drop in GDP of 25 per cent since 2008, the bulk of which came after the
memorandum agreement in 2010 (ELIAMEP, Crisis Observatory). But imposed austerity went
also beyond direct cuts, with Greece being pressured to enact labour market deregulation and to
make wage-setting ‘more efficient’. As Lehndorff (2015a: 165) points out, new labour market
legislation in Greece included ‘the priority of company agreements over sector agreements, the
suspension of the extension procedure of collective agreements, and a 22 per cent cut in the
statutory minimum wage (31 per cent for under-25s)’. Similarly, as part of the bailout package for
Portugal, the government agreed to stop extending collective agreements automatically to the
whole industrial sector in 2011. Unsurprisingly collective bargaining coverage has fallen
drastically, from a total of 116 industry level agreements in 2010 to just 12 by 2012 (ETUI,
http://www.worker-participation.eu/National-Industrial-
Relations/Countries/Portugal/Collective-Bargaining; accessed 22/11/2013). Hence, while in
18
2010, 1,309,300 employees were covered by collective industry level agreements, in 2012 it was
only 291,100 employees. There have also been amendments to the Labour Code with the aim of
creating greater flexibility for firms, thereby allegedly enhancing competitiveness and wage
moderation. These changes have included reduced pay for overtime by 50 per cent; further
flexibilisation of fixed-term contracts by extending the probationary period from six months to a
maximum of three years; and the relaxing of rules for redundancy and dismissal, especially for
reasons revolving around economic circumstances (Clauwaert and Schomann, 2012: 9, 11-2; Pine
and Abreu, 2012: 25). In short, the crisis has been used by Troika officials to undermine the
power of trade unions by cutting back their involvement in collective bargaining and industrial
relations more generally whilst also creating more flexible labour markets, further enhancing the
power of capital.
Additional pressure was put on peripheral countries to privatise key national assets in
order to improve the balance sheets. This pressure often bypassed democratic procedures. In
August 2011 in relation to Italy, Jean-Claude Trichet, the then President of the ECB, and Mario
Draghi, who succeeded him in November 2011, urged ‘the full liberalisation of local public
services . . . through large scale privatisations’, ignoring the fact that 95.5 percent of Italian voters
had rejected the privatisation of local water services in a valid national referendum less than eight
weeks earlier (Erne, 2012: 229; see also Bieler, 2015). The initial aim of privatisations in Portugal
including various public utilities was to raise five billion Euros. By April 2014, this target had
been exceeded reaching almost nine billion Euros, with more still scheduled. The SOEs which
remain have been restructured through redundancies and pay cuts to bring down costs, and most
have ‘reached operational balance by the end of 2012’ (European Commission, 2013: 28). Greece
had initially agreed to a proposal for only three billion euros worth of privatisation. This was
eventually raised to 50 billion Euros only months later. Against this background of sluggish
privatisation, the most recent bailout agreement was used to impose even more stringent
monitoring processes. Greece had to commit itself to transfer €50bn worth of Greek state assets
19
to a new fund with little influence by Greek politicians.5 Arguably, the struggles over the most
recent bailout agreement of Greece signify most clearly the dynamics of class struggle
underpinning the Eurozone crisis. When the Greek parliament had decided to hold a referendum
over the Troika bailout proposals, the ECB withdrew provision of additional emergency liquidity
assistance to Greece, thereby indirectly forcing the Greek government to close the banks and its
stock market as well as to limit ATM withdrawals and transfers of funds.6 During the
negotiations, Troika officials had regularly dismissed any Greek counterproposals. While the
Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis attempted, rationally, to explain along post-Keynesian
lines why further austerity could not result in a revival of the Greek economy, the Troika—
relying on capital’s superior balance of power—simply imposed its conditions. This was aided
through a curtailment of both temporal sovereignty as governments no longer had time ‘to
deliberate about what their policies should be’ (Flohr and Harrison 2016: 315), and spatial
sovereignty as Troika officials dictated the terms of policy conditionality and the timeframe of
when it had to be fulfilled if quarterly doses of financial assistance were to be maintained (Sotiris,
2017: 177-8). In sum, inspired by Smith (1986: 100), the fluid geography of capitalist expansion
and equalisation marking the spatial political economy of Europe has elsewhere given way to a
hardened geography of crisis dominated by differentiation.
Conclusion
European post-Keynesian analyses have made significant contributions to our understanding of
the Eurozone crisis. They correctly highlight that EMU deepened unevenness across the
European political economy and a lack of sufficient aggregate demand at the regional level has
5 Graeme Wearden, ‘Greece bailout agreement: key points’, The Guardian (14 July 2015),
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jul/13/greece-bailout-agreement-key-points-grexit.
6 Ian Traynor and John Hooper, ‘Greekbanks to stay closed on Monday’, The Guardian (29 June
2015), https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/28/greek-crisis-ecb-decide-emergency-funding.
20
undermined the possibilities of overcoming the crisis. The post-Keynesian suggestion of
empowering trade unions in order to secure higher demand levels in export-oriented countries
such as Germany is in itself logical, but overlooks the conditions of class struggle underpinning
the crisis. A focus on the structuring condition of uneven and combined development as well as
the resultant agency of class struggles embedded within European integration can uncover the
contradictory current dynamics underlying the Eurozone crisis. Uneven development has always
been one of the key systematic expressions of the geographical expansion of capitalism and it is
inherent in the very constitution and structure of the spatial political economy of Europe. The
interdependent development of export-led economic growth models versus debt-driven
economic growth models has been re-enforced by the institutions of EMU, but ultimately its
origins go much further back even beyond European integration and the expanded ‘free’ trade
agenda as reflected in the Internal Market project. In other words, before and since the beginning
of EU membership, Greece, Portugal, Ireland but also Spain were drawn into relations of uneven
and combined development, which inhibited the potential to ‘catch-up’ beyond labour-intensive
industries within the conditions of production shaping Europe. High economic growth rates in
the early 1990s, further facilitated by easy credit through membership in the Eurozone were
unsustainable in the end. The European Union therefore provides robust evidence that ‘the
counteracting force of the uneven development of capital prevents the formation of an actual
global community of interest for capital’ (Mandel, 1975: 332-3).
When the Eurozone crisis threatened to undermine capitalist accumulation in Europe,
capital used the crisis for further neoliberal restructuring, increasing its power vis-à-vis labour.
Post-Keynesians correctly point out that, economically, austerity has not worked when
considered in national, overall terms. Nevertheless, as David Ruccio has demonstrated while
analysing Latin America, political economy policies of structural adjustment can be regarded as a
success for capital, in strengthening the class dimensions of capitalism. ‘What may be a failure
from the standpoint of achieving full employment, price stability, and balance-of-payments
21
equilibrium can be considered successful in terms of promoting the widening and deepening of
capitalist class processes’ (Ruccio, 2011: 204). Related to the Eurozone crisis and understanding
austerity as a capitalist project, it does not matter that Greece, for example, has gone ever further
into economic decline. In strengthening capital over labour, opening up Greek companies for
privatisation, austerity has facilitated new points of value-capture assisting capital in the search
for further surplus accumulation. Thus, it is no surprise that magnified neoliberal restructuring
has continued to be the main response to the Eurozone crisis in Europe.
Yet, this does not imply that there is no resistance or that alternatives are impossible.
Counter-movements, however, cannot simply stem from theoretical reflections by post-
Keynesian economists. They emerge out of concrete struggles often in spaces where exploitation
is at its severest. Be it Vio.me, a large metallurgy factory in the north of Greece occupied and run
by its workers, be it the social health care clinics across Greece (Jordan, 2017: 215-20; Daskalaki
and Kokkinidis, 2017), be it ongoing resistance against water privatisation in Thessaloniki
combined with attempts at transforming water into a commons (Bieler and Jordan, 2017), or be
it the fight back for housing in Spain (Bailey, Clua-Losada, Huke and Ribera-Almandoz, 2017:
210), it is through such counter-spaces of class struggle that, ultimately, the way towards a
different future may emerge.
22
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